logo
Council reprimanded after exposing sensitive data

Council reprimanded after exposing sensitive data

Yahoo29-05-2025
A west London council has been reprimanded after personal details of more than 6,500 people including "sensitive" data about children was left online for almost two years.
Hammersmith and Fulham Council inadvertently published the data when responding to a Freedom of Information (FoI) request in October 2021.
The local authority's response included an excel spreadsheet with 35 hidden workbooks, 10 of which contained personal details, which was not discovered until November 2023.
A council spokesperson said the error was fixed as soon as they were notified and staff are no longer allowed to supply information using the same format.
The Information Commissioner's Office (ICO), said the council's response to the FoI was uploaded to its own online disclosure log and provided to the website What Do They Know? (WDTK), which the request was made through.
WDTK published the response on its own site in December 2021.
The breach was not identified until WDTK completed a review of its website, after which it informed the council.
The information was taken down from both sites.
According to the ICO, a total of 6,528 people were affected, 2,342 of whom were children.
While the adult data set included council employees, former employees and agency staff, the personal information belonging to children was described as sensitive in nature and related to the placement of looked-after children in the council's care.
The ICO said children's personal data is considered "deserving of specific protection" and in this case, of particular concern was the personal data belonging to 96 unaccompanied asylum-seeking children.
There is no evidence the data was inappropriately accessed, processed or shared.
The ICO noted a number of remedial steps taken by the council, including that redaction and disclosure guidance has been updated and training completed with the relevant team.
Listen to the best of BBC Radio London on Sounds and follow BBC London on Facebook, X and Instagram. Send your story ideas to hello.bbclondon@bbc.co.uk
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Gardener who tended to £200,000 cannabis factory was caught when police found a set of keys
Gardener who tended to £200,000 cannabis factory was caught when police found a set of keys

Yahoo

time29 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Gardener who tended to £200,000 cannabis factory was caught when police found a set of keys

A gardener who came to the UK illegally in order to make money was found to be tending to a cannabis factory with plants worth up to £200,000. There were four growing rooms in a house which contained more than 400 plants. Blloshmi Albi, 33, was stopped by a police officer while he was travelling as a passenger in a car on February 2 in Cardiff. He was searched and was found in possession of a mobile phone and a set of keys. A sentencing hearing at Cardiff Crown Court on Friday heard the keys belonged to a house in Heathfield Place, Cathays, and the phone contained images of a cannabis factory. For the latest court reports sign up to our crime newsletter. READ MORE: Town to lose pub that's been there for centuries READ MORE: Couple hoping to open restaurant told they can't offer takeaway service The property was searched and the whole house had been given over to the production of cannabis. A total of 94 mother plants were discovered in four growing rooms, and there were 330 saplings in a nursery area. Prosecutor James Evans said there was evidence of an earlier crop which had already been grown. The plants found in the address were found to have an upper value of £200,000. Albi, of no fixed abode, later pleaded guilty to cannabis production. The court heard he was of previous good character. In mitigation, the court heard the defendant had spent 91 days on remand in custody. It was said he had entered the country illegally in order to "make money" and became involved in the enterprise as a gardener. Sentencing, Judge Carl Harrison described the cannabis factory as a "sophisticated commercial set up". Albi was sentenced to eight months imprisonment. The Home Office will decide whether the defendant will be deported following the end of his sentence.

How a 'moth-eaten rag' became a war memorial
How a 'moth-eaten rag' became a war memorial

Yahoo

time29 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

How a 'moth-eaten rag' became a war memorial

A small coastal town is home to an unusual World War Two war memorial created by soldiers in memory of comrades who died while prisoners of war (POW). It was made by men from the 4th Battalion, The Suffolk Regiment, who were captured at the fall of Singapore in 1942. They spent more than three years as slave labourers for the Japanese army, much of it at Chungkai camp in Thailand. The centrepiece of the memorial in Leiston, Suffolk, is a union jack, used in the camp during funeral services and brought home by Corp Herbie Bailey after he and the other survivors were finally liberated. In 1952, the veterans transformed the "moth-eaten rag" into a tribute to the POWs of the 4th Battalion who died and to mark the 10th anniversary of their capture. "Sometimes people just refer to it as a flag, but it's not just a flag - the flag is just the centrepiece of a very, very interesting and unusual war memorial," said Taff Gillingham, chairman of the Friends of the Suffolk Regiment. In 1942, the 4th Battalion was among many Allied divisions rushed to defend Singapore, in the wake of Japan's attack on Pearl Harbour. After fierce fighting but against impossible odds, the British, Australian and Indian forces were ordered to surrender. Somehow the 11ft by 6ft (3.3m by 1.8m) flag went with the men of the 4th Battalion when they were transferred to Chungkai camp, said Mr Gillingham. This was a POW camp used during the construction of the infamous Burma-Thailand Railway, and today it is a Commonwealth War Graves Commission cemetery. About 13,000 Allied prisoners of war died during the railway project, plus an estimated 80,000 to 100,000 civilians, according to the commission. Mr Gillingham said the 4th and 5th battalions of the Suffolk Regiment were about 2,000 strong when they disembarked at Singapore in 1942, but more than a third of them had died by the end of the war. The POWs were allowed to build a little wooden chapel at Chungkai for church services, where the flag rested on its altar. "And every time one of the soldiers died, it was used for the funeral service," Mr Gillingham said. "Starved, beaten and executed for the slightest misdemeanours - the thing that inspires me is their resilience and their ingenuity, making medicines from plants that they'd find in the jungle, for example." Every aspect of the memorial has a specific link to the 4th Battalion, a territorial unit which recruited from the Leiston area. Mr Gillingham said: "The frame is just as interesting [as the flag], in that it's made from wood salvaged from Southwold Pier and the metal frame it sits on was made by the engineering works of Garretts, the engineering works in Leiston, so it was a proper local project. "And the colours behind the flag mean something too - they are the colours of the Pacific Star, the medal that all the Far East prisoners of war were given." Today, it is owned by the Friends of the Suffolk Regiment and is on long-term loan to the town's Long Shop Museum. When the men of the 4th Battalion were liberated at the end of the war, many, including Corp Bailey, continued to serve in the territorials for years, with weekly training and annual camps. Underneath the memorial is a plaque which describes it as "a moth-eaten rag on a worm-eaten pole". It also records how the union jack was "hoisted to the top of the pole in the camp by the men of the battalion who survived three years of living hell". Mr Gillingham said: "It's often said to be the only war memorial based on an artefact brought back from the field, and it's certainly the only one I can think of, but it's a lovely thing because it has a direct connection with the place, and the people, with those who died." A service to mark the 80th anniversary of Victory over Japan Day and the end of World War Two will be held at the memorial at 10:30 BST. Follow Suffolk news on BBC Sounds, Facebook, Instagram and X. More on this story 'Death railway' soldiers honoured with exhibition Film to tell regiment's 'poignant' war battles 'VE celebrations muted due to Far East prisoners' Related internet links The Long Shop Museum, Leiston Friends of the Suffolk Regiment

Wales' most diverse school that's oversubscribed and sending kids to Oxbridge
Wales' most diverse school that's oversubscribed and sending kids to Oxbridge

Yahoo

time29 minutes ago

  • Yahoo

Wales' most diverse school that's oversubscribed and sending kids to Oxbridge

Anticipation rippled around the school hall as pupils at one of Wales' most diverse and oversubscribed schools arrived to collect the results that will determine their next steps in higher education, apprenticeships, or employment. It was an important milestone for the pupils at Cardiff's Fitzalan High School, and further proved the school's reputation. This year's A-level results in Wales show a slight improvement in overall pass rates, with 97.5% of students achieving grades A*–E, up 0.1 percentage points from 2024. The proportion achieving the top A* grade rose to 10.5%, an increase of 0.4 percentage points compared with last year. READ MORE: One minute I was playing a gig and the next I had cancer, but now I'm off to university READ MORE: Swansea schools beat Wales average for A-level results Across the UK, more than one in ten results achieved the highest grade, although the total number of A level entries this summer was lower than in previous years. Fitzalan High School is a school that stands out in Wales, it has built a strong reputation for academic achievement and community engagement, offering a broad curriculum that supports its students' further education. The school has approximately 82% of pupils with English as an additional language, but huge efforts are made to make sure the community is involved and recent inspection reports have praised its high standards, inclusive environment, and commitment to preparing students for a range of future opportunities. It speaks volumes that it is the second most popular school in Cardiff with recent figures showing it had to turn down 144 for its 300 places. Head teacher, Adam Lear, spoke to Wales Online about the pride he has in all his pupils. "Their results reflect not only the hard work but also the dedication and ambition and results day is very much a celebration of their individual journeys and collective success," he says. "I would like to take the opportunity to thank all the dedicated and supportive families and communities for helping our young people achieve their goals.' Mr Lear praised all the students at Fitzalan High School for their hard work and stresses the massive role that the supportive community plays in the lives of the pupils. He was also keen to stress how ambitious students at Fitzalan High School are, with many past students attending prestigious universities like Oxford and Cambridge, and with one former overachieving pupil going on to study computer science and politics at Harvard University. For the students, it was an anxious wait as they gathered with friends and teachers to open their results. For many, the moment brought relief and excitement after months of preparation. After the nerves, came the relief for many. Imeth Bandara, 18, achieved an A* in maths and three A's in chemistry, physics, and biology, and is hoping to study medicine in 2026 after taking a gap year, and he has a strong interest in becoming a biologist in the future to explore viruses and their cures. "When you do something, you need to enjoy it, that's how to get good grades, and I enjoyed doing my A levels. I try to find everything enjoyable, that's how I find it easy to understand." Fellow student Nahid Hossin, 18, from Riverside, received an A* in maths and three As in physics, chemistry, and biology, and has been accepted into University College London to study electrical engineering. His words of advice are: "Never doubt yourself, always keep working hard, and the results will come." Nahid's teachers praised him for always being a top-performing student since his early years in Fitzalan. Paluck Bhandari, 18, from Leckwith, studied Maths, Sociology, and English, and received two A*s and a B in her results, which means a place at Oxford to study law. "I just want to say thank you to all my teachers that I've had since year 7 and to my parents, it was a stressful process, but I'm so glad to be going into university that will give me the tools to make a change in the world,' she says. She originally wanted to study in Edinburgh because of her admiration for the city, but fell in love with Oxford through a summer school she attended two years ago and set her mind on attending Oxford University instead. There were also great results for AS Level students like Khadeejah Abdurahman, 17, who achieved two As and one B in English Literature, sociology, and Health and Childcare. Another top performing student, Kate Mingo, an 18-year-old student from Fitzalan High School, felt proud to open her results as she achieved four A*s in maths, economics, psychology, and sociology. She is going to the University of Leeds to study economics. "Fitzalan is such a supportive school," she says. "And I couldn't ask for any better students, really amazing staff. "I'm very relieved and very happy I don't have to retake A levels. I'm excited but also nervous to move to Leeds. I visited and it seemed very nice." Not all students are continuing their higher education in the UK. Milly Pugh, 18, studied Psychology, Sociology, and Chemistry and achieved A*, A, and C in her results and is planning to study Sociology abroad in the United States at Connecticut College. "I'm a little nervous to fly out, but I'm very excited to meet everyone and get to know America.' What inspired Milly was a former Fitzalan student that has studied in the USA, which inspired her to do the same. Milly has wanted to study in America since her GCSE years and decided to go forward with it with the help of her teachers. Aidah Dawah, 18, from Grangetown, studied in Fitzalan High School from year 7 up until sixth form. She achieved an A and two Bs in Welsh Baccalaureate, Sociology, and Medical Science. She is now going on to study medical genetics at Swansea University. Aidah describes how happy she is to pursue a degree in something she is passionate about. 'Don't let your GCSE results put you in disbelief of what you can achieve in A levels, and I promise resitting is completely fine.' Aidah stresses how difficult A levels were, but describes how supportive teachers made her experience so much easier. "Building connections with your teachers makes such a difference," she says Jo Saxton, UCAS chief executive, said: 'This year's students were just thirteen when the pandemic hit, and their secondary schooling was turned upside down. "It's great to see these applicants securing a university place in record numbers, seeking more education and investing in their futures. I am equally delighted to see how universities across the country have responded to their ambition." The class of 2025 at Fitzalan High School has demonstrated exceptional hard work, resilience, and ambition, reflected in their impressive A-level results this year. These achievements are a testament to the supportive environment at the school and the dedication of both staff and students. For many, these results represent a crucial step, laying the foundation for a bright future.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store